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Posts Tagged ‘Place’

No Place (to Work) Like Home: 15 Extraordinary Office Designs

21 Apr

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

shoffice main

Warning – your cramped, cluttered cubicle might seem even more soulless than usual compared to the magnificence of these beautifully appointed home offices, some with all glass walls overlooking the ocean, others set into the backyard for privacy and connection to nature. From prefab pods to brilliant DIY creations, these unusual home office designs make the prospect of working feel downright pleasant.

Office In Flight
home office flight 1

home office flight 2

home office flight 3

A wing of this vacation house in the woods of California lifts up into the air as if it’s about to take off, its glass walls the only thing separating the home office inside from the natural surroundings.

Park-Like Office with Swing Table & Moss Carpet
home office park 1

home office park 2

hoem office park 3

home office park 4

When you can’t actually take your work outside, you can just feel like you’re outdoors with a little creative decorating. Nidolab Arquitectura outfitted this home in Argentina with a hanging table and real moss floor covering in lush green hues, illuminating the whole thing with natural daylight via an oversized skylight.

Lush Ivy-Covered Backyard Office
Home office backyard ivy

home office backyard ivy 2

You can barely even tell there’s a building under all of the ivy that’s been trained to grow up trellises on the outside of this gorgeous backyard office in San Francisco. ‘Parkside Garden’ by Scott Lewis Landscaping Architecture creates a visual link between the main house on the property, and the adjacent public park.

Vintage Ikarus Bus Turned Office Cube
Home office vintage bus

home office vintage bus 2

home office vintage bus 3

The cab of an old Ikarus bus was cut in half and inserted into the corner of a living room to create a tiny enclosed home office in Hungary. The owner spruced up the vintage find and added a corner desk to the interior to make it a cozy place for concentration.

Shingled Spherical Office Pod
hoem office sphere

home office sphere 2

This shingled orb by Archipod looks like it could have fallen right out of a massive tree and into the backyard. Each one of these luxury prefabs comes equipped with porthole windows, top-hinged gull doors, electrical hookups, a semicircular interior desk, lighting and a heater.

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No Place To Work Like Home 15 Extraordinary Office Designs

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First “Drawn in Place” Architecture Made with a 3D-Printing Pen

29 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

3d printed architecture pen

A group of students from the University of Tokyo have created the world’s first work of 3D pen-drawn architecture, extruding thermoplastic filament to generate a structurally-stable arch installation.

3d pen modeling student

A digital tracking system helped builders connect rods with extruded supports, generating a lattice-like system of interconnected trusses (resulting in a kind of lightweight, smaller-scale space frame). The combination of rigid rods and fluid connectors helps the whole structural network, providing tension as well as compression capabilities.

3d pen in use

The handheld device enabling the extrusions operates much like a hot glue gun or static 3D printer, heating the constituent material and making it malleable before it hardens upon deployment. Unlike large-scale printers, this approach enables minute on-site work by anyone trained to use the machine, reducing costs and complexity.

3d connected network structure

“Technology has traditionally been used to automate and replace human labour,” design team member Kevin Clement, said in an interview with Dezeen. “The issue with this approach is that it fails to take advantage of human intuition during fabrication. We believe our approach can bridge the current dichotomy between machine and human-made production.”

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DxOMark Mobile report: LG G4 takes second place in rankings

24 Sep

DxOMark has released its test results for the LG G4, which boasts a 16MP 1/2.6″ sensor and F1.8 lens. Other camera features include a laser system to support autofocus speed and accuracy, 3-axis optical image stabilization and an LED flash. We’ve updated our LG G4 camera review with a summary of DxO’s findings – find out what makes the G4 worthy of DxO’s top 10 mobile rankings. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Road Blocks: LEGO-Like Modular Roads & Paths Snap Into Place

21 Jul

[ By Steph in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

road blocks lego 1

New roads could be quickly and easily slotted into place, piece by piece, with a new Lego-like modular plastic system that makes the building process feel more like playtime. Prototypes of the PlasticRoad concept will soon be tested in a collaboration with the city of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, potentially replacing asphalt and tar with a strong, corrosion-resistant recycled aggregate made of plastic waste removed from the oceans.

road blocks lego 2

According to manufacturer VolkerWessels, these modular components can withstand temperatures between -40 and 176 degrees Fahrenheit and other harsh weather conditions, and are ideal for roads built upon structurally unsound ground like sand. It’s unclear whether they would shift around on surfaces like that over time, however, or how cars would handle on their surfaces when it’s rainy, snowy or icy.

road blocks lego 3

They’re hollow, so cables and utility pipelines can be installed under the surface, protected from the elements and easy to maintain. Quick installation means far briefer periods of disrupted traffic during construction, and the prefabricated panels can simply be transported to the sight and lowered into place. If they pass the tests, the PlasticRoad project could see its first real-life installation in Rotterdam within three years.

smart highways

The concept is reminiscent of other asphalt alternatives that have been proposed over the years, like ‘smart highways’ covered with dynamic paint providing useful information to drivers (pictured above) and heated, LED-light-embedded solar roadways. The latter concept has been dismissed by many critics as unrealistic, considering the vast expense involved in manufacturing and maintaining them and the likelihood that they would draw power from the grid anytime it’s not sunny.

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Lost Place: Ein verlassenes Dorf

20 Dec

Verlassenes Dorf

Auf der Karte ist es eingezeichnet, der Weg führt von der Hauptstraße weg auf die Nebenstraße einer Nebenstraße. Eine kilometerlange Sackgasse, die am Meer endet. Eine hauptsächlich von Ziegen genutzte Straße führt zu einem in ein winziges Tal gebettetes Dorf, das nur noch wenig Leben beherbergt. Umgeben von idyllischer Natur, Bergen und dem Blick auf das offene Meer in der Ferne strahlt es eine verstörende Ruhe aus.

Bereits von der Abzweigung der Hauptstraße aus ist es zu sehen, schon auf Entfernung wirkt es befremdlich. Fährt man die einzige befahrbare Straße entlang durch das Dorf, begegnet man noch etwas Leben in Form von ein, zwei geparkten Autos und einem noch bewohnten Haus, umgeben von Pflanzenkübeln.

Häuserdächer im Grünen

Foto: Chris Hieronimus

Blanke Häuser und Wolken

Foto: Hanna Malou

Wir hatten davon gehört, dass es ein komplett verlassenes Dorf auf der anderen Seite dieser griechischen Insel geben soll. Der Mitarbeiter der Mietwagenfirma konnte uns vor der Abfahrt nichts darüber sagen, obwohl er aus der Gegend stammt, in der das Dorf liegt. Der Punkt auf der Karte deutet nicht auf eine verlassene Siedlung hin, es ist einfach ein Punkt wie alle anderen.

Aber gut, wir waren entschlossen, es selbst herauszufinden. Nach einigen Stunden Fahrt an malerischer Küste und gemütlichen kleinen Dörfern vorbei, einige Kilometer hinter der letzten größeren Stadt und nach einigen unbeabsichtigt gefahrenen Schleifen biegen wir an der richtigen Abzweigung ab und fahren einmal durch den kurzen Straßenabschnitt, der durch das Dorf führt. Begeisterung macht sich breit.

Am Ortsausgang führt ein Weg ins eigentliche Dorf hinein, dort lassen wir unser Auto nach wenigen Metern stehen. Die Wege im Dorf sind nicht für Fahrzeuge gemacht. Das erste Haus ist verschlossen, eine rostige Treppe führt hoch aufs Dach, so wie bei vielen anderen Häusern im Dorf. Wir gehen hinauf. Vom Dach aus bietet sich uns ein großartiger Blick über das ganze Dorf und das kleine Tal, in dem wir uns befinden.

Es müssen um die 150 Häuser sein, die teilweise offen stehen, teils fest verschlossen sind. Manche sind eingestürzt, andere gut erhalten. Die Kirche im Dorf ist seltsamerweise frisch renoviert, glänzt mit neuen Fenstern und macht einen gepflegten Eindruck.

Ein verlassenes Dorf

Foto: Hanna Malou

Ein verlassenes Dorf

Foto: Chris Hieronimus

Auf dem weiteren Weg ins Dorf stoßen wir schnell an eine Absperrung, hinter der sich ein Bewässerungssystem von Gartenschläuchen ausbreitet, das eine Vielzahl an Pflanzen, Blumen und kleinen Beeten versorgt. Die wenigen Menschen, die hier noch leben, haben sich inmitten der Ruinen kleine Oasen einrichtet. Dieses erste bewohnte Haus ist recht weit oben, mit Zugang zur Straße. Ein weiteres bewohntes Haus entdecken wir mitten im Kern des Dorfes, nachdem wir an vielen verlassenen Häusern und Ruinen vorbei gegangen sind.

Die Bewohner sehen wir nicht, wir hören sie nur ab und zu, zwischen Ziegen und Hundegebell. Unweigerlich fragen wir uns, wer hier noch lebt und warum. Weshalb lebt man in einem großen, nahezu menschenleeren Dorf, das zum Großteil der Verwitterung preisgegeben ist? Teilweise geht die Fantasie mit uns durch, als wären wir Jugendliche in einem Abenteuer-Roman.

Wurden die Häuser vielleicht überhaupt nicht verlassen, sondern ihre Bewohner verstarben nach und nach? Auf der Insel gibt es sicher Schwierigkeiten damit, den Nachwuchs zu halten. Vermutlich zieht es die Jugend in die wenigen Städte oder aufs Festland. Es ist nachvollziehbar, dass dieses kleine Dorf zwar dank malerischer Umgebung in völliger Ruhe liegt, aber als dauerhafter Wohnort wenig attraktiv ist und kaum Chancen bietet, mit seinem Leben etwas anzufangen.

Zwei Menschen auf einem Dach

Foto: Chris Hieronimus

Wir finden einige Dokumente, Briefe und Zeitungen, die auf 1995 datiert sind und schließen daraus, dass das Dorf bis dahin bewohnt war. Das wiederum spricht eher dafür, dass es doch einen Zeitpunkt gab, an dem die verbliebenen Dorfbewohner sich entschlossen haben, wegzuziehen. Sind die wenigen Menschen, die heute hier leben, übrig geblieben oder haben sie sich später in dem verlassenen Dorf nieder gelassen? Wir möchten als Besucher nicht stören und machen daher einen Bogen um die Grünanlagen der Leute. Es wird recht früh dunkel, daher entschließen wir uns dazu, die Nacht im Dorf zu verbringen.

Es gibt einfach viel zu viel zu entdecken, als dass wir nach wenigen Stunden schon wieder fahren könnten. Wir wandern also durch das Dorf, untersuchen Häuser nach offenen Türen und Fenstern. Leider sind die offenen Häuser nicht in einem Zustand, der es erlauben würde, darin ein Lager aufzuschlagen. Da das Tal aber völlig windstill ist, gehen wir zurück auf das Dach des ersten Hauses und stellen unser Zelt auf. Die Dämmerung macht das Dorf nicht unbedingt freundlicher.

Die Geräusche der Ziegen, Katzen, Hunde und der Menschen lassen sich nicht genau zuordnen, wir sitzen also auf dem Dach und haben ein mulmiges Gefühl im Bauch. Der Entdeckergeist und das rationale Denken ergeben sich schließlich der Paranoia, spätestens als irgendein lautes Geräusch durch das Tal schallt, zu dem jeder von uns dreien eine andere Assoziation hat.

Ein Hochzeitsfoto auf einer Keksdose

Foto: Chris Hieronimus

Ein Bild an der Wand

Foto: Hanna Malou

Wir entscheiden uns dennoch für einen Nachtspaziergang durch das Dorf. Das Licht der wenigen Laternen ist ausreichend und wir wollen uns die Kirche gern näher anschauen. Der einzige Weg zur Kirche führt an einem der noch bewohnten Häuser vorbei, aus dem Stimmen und klapperndes Geschirr zu hören sind. Ein Mann füttert die Katzen. Auf dem Rückweg machen wir dennoch einen Bogen um das Haus und klettern über eine Ruine. Die Paranoia gewinnt.

Den entspannten Abend auf dem Häuserdach hätte nur ein Lagerfeuer noch aufwerten können. Wir sind versorgt mit lokalen Früchten und blicken in die Ferne, wo im Dunkeln der Übergang von Meer zu Horizont verschwimmt. Unsere Stimmung wird getragen von der Bewunderung für die Schönheit dieses Ortes und zugleich der Verwunderung über die Paradoxien, die sich uns nicht erschließen.

Am nächsten Morgen weicht die Paranoia der warmen Morgensonne. Das zuvor an der Straße geparkte Auto steht mit laufendem Motor neben unserem Mietwagen. Von unserem Dach aus beobachten wir und fragen uns, was vor sich geht. Haben wir jemanden mit unserer Anwesenheit verärgert? Ein Mädchen steigt mit ihrem rosa Rucksack aus dem Wagen, läuft vor zur Straße und steigt in den Schulbus ein, der sie die Hügel hinauf mitnimmt.

Verlassene Küche

Ein Fernseher auf einem Herd

Fotos: Chris Hieronimus

Wir spazieren erneut durch das Dorf, dieses Mal im Hellen. Über Dächer, Balkone und durch offene Fenster kletternd finden wir in vielen Häusern Spuren der Menschen, die sie einst bewohnten. Fotos, Briefe, Tagebücher und persönliche Gegenstände, teilweise vollständig eingerichtete Zimmer mit Schränken samt kompletter Garderobe. Warum wurden so viele persönliche Gegenstände zurückgelassen? Wer würde sein Haus verlassen, aber Tagebücher und Hochzeitsfotos nicht mitnehmen?

Auf einem Balkon weiter oben steht ein Mann und raucht eine morgendlich Zigarette. Wir grüßen und spazieren weiter. Ein weißer Bus fährt durch das Dorf, den wir später einige Kilometer weiter wiedertreffen. Zwischen zwei halb eingestürzten Gebäuden pflücken wir einige reife Granatäpfel vom Baum und essen sie in der warmen Sonne auf „unserem“ Dach. Dann verabschieden wir uns von diesem seltsamen Ort, unsere offenen Fragen nehmen wir mit.

Ein verlassenes Zimmer

Kaputte Schuhe

Fotos: Hanna Malou

Der Besitzer des weißen Busses ist Obsthändler im nächsten Dorf. Er hat uns auf dem Dach zelten sehen, sagt er lachend. Über die Geschichte des Dorfes kann er uns auch nicht viel sagen, was zum Teil auch der Sprachbarriere geschuldet ist. Die Menschen sind einfach irgendwann gegangen, sagt er. Er lässt uns von dem köstlichen, lokalen Honig probieren, wir kaufen Obst und Gemüse und machen uns wieder auf den Weg.


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Brothers in Benches: Pallets Offer Public a Place to Sit

04 Sep

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

Pallet Benches 1

Packing down nearly as flat as they were before they were modified, six interlocking structures made of pallets unfold to reveal a variety of seating options with greenery poking out of the bench backs. Johannesburg artist r1 was asked to develop the public seating as part of a residence program in the city aiming to enliven public space and come up with innovative ways to contribute to the community.

Pallet Benches 5

Pallet Benches 3

All six units can be combined into one larger structure, grouped together in smaller configurations or used alone. Each one contains two fold-down benches that can be used back-to-back, side-to-side or on a diagonal.

Pallet Benches 2

Pallet Benches 4

Made of discarded pallets, each one is on wheels so it can be moved quickly and easily. In addition to providing comfortable places for locals to congregate, the seats bring a little greenery into the urban environment.

Pallet Benches 6

Pallet Benches 7

Other unconventional iterations of urban furniture have included UFO-inspired loungers, ‘stair squares’ and even seats that require strangers to interact with each other.

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Internet Explorer 11 – Place Sites Directly in the Start Menu for Easy Access

21 Apr

Add links to frequently-visited websites directly to the Windows Start Menu.

Are there websites you visit often enough with Internet Explorer 11 that you would like to make opening them up more convenient? Instead of navigating the Favorites menu of IE11, you can pin links to websites directly to the Windows Start Menu.

After opening the website from Internet Explorer 11, perform the following steps depending on your Windows interface:…

Read more at MalekTips.
New Computer and Technology Help and Tips – MalekTips.Com

 
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How to Capture the Essence of a Place – Travel Photography Tips

11 Dec

How to Capture the Essence of a Place

Storytelling  Sangay Walking Up Trail to Tiger s Nest Monastery  Paro Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Travel Photography Tips

If you’re a traveler and you enjoy bringing back photos of the places you’ve visited – let’s face it, who doesn’t – then it’s extremely important to capture a set of images that more completely tells the story of the place. To me, the best way to ensure this in my own work is to work from a well thought out and organized shot list. Then I don’t have to worry about trying to remember the categories of images I have yet to photograph, as I have a check list at the ready all the time and I can easily track my progress.

Creating a shot list

The idea of creating a shot list is nothing new. It’s a concept that’s been around since the dawn of photography, and it’s so easy to incorporate into your photography workflow. I research what’s unique about the place so that I know what to be on the lookout for and then I make a list of all the categories of images I’d like to capture before I even set foot in a location. I find the more I know what I’m looking for, the more likely I am to find it. It really is as simple as that.

Scouting a location

Recently I had the opportunity to spend 10 days scouting in the reclusive Kingdom of Bhutan. It is one of the few countries in the world that require you to work with a local guide to drive and show you around the country at all times, that is unless you’re from a small number of surrounding countries, like India, whose citizens can come and go as they please.

Scouting trips are essential to laying the groundwork for the future photo tours I lead to any country, but even more so to this landlocked nation, about the size of Switzerland, but with only about 700,000 inhabitants. During a scouting trip I have a chance to meet, assess and bond with the local guide(s); visit the sites our group will visit; have the experiences they’ll be having; figure out the best times of days to be in certain locations and from where to shoot; and even test out the hotels, modes of transportation, restaurants and other services we’ll be using. But of course I’m also out to capture the quality images necessary to help market the trip to potential clients and to add these to my ever-growing portfolio from around the world. Additionally, although I’m often shooting right alongside my groups, having been to the location allows me to more fully concentrate on helping each participant to bring back the best possible images from their trip.

Dream location – Bhutan

Bhutan is a photographer’s dream, and there seems to be a photo opportunity around every corner from most of the categories on my shot list. But instead of shooting randomly, I try to use my list to track and organize the images I’m after. Maintaining your own shot list is as easy as using a piece of pen and paper, creating a spreadsheet, or simply using a free Notes app on your smart phone. Although, I did find the use of a shot list so important that I actually created an app for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch® called My Shot Lists for Travel to aid me in doing this, and it’s always in my pocket.

Below is a set of images I culled from the many thousands I made during that initial scouting trip, as well as several from the photo tour itself. This select group of images is meant to give viewers a high level sense of what the country of Bhutan is about, and what one might expect on a visit there. I could, of course, add dozens of other images from additional categories (food, interiors, sacred sites, details, etc.) to help create a complete cultural portrait of Bhutan, and when I put together my slideshow presentations I certainly have the chance to do that, but unfortunately space doesn’t allow here. Perhaps in a follow up article I’ll continue this theme.

The following categories are presented in alphabetical order:

ARCHITECTURE

Travel Photography Tips Architecture  Punakha Dzong  Punakha Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

The architecture in Bhutan is extremely unique and it’s rare to find a single building that doesn’t adhere to this strict building convention. The “dzongs,” or fortresses (Punakha Dzong is pictured here), that dot the country are icons, and as such they’re an essential part of the visual story I want to tell.

EVERYDAY LIFE

Travel Photography Tips - Everyday Life  Woman Spinning Prayer Wheels at 7th Century Monastery  Bumthang Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

It’s extremely important to show the local people just doing what they do. It might be standing in doorways, sweeping the local monastery courtyard, or filling butter lamps. As is the custom in Bhutan, many people, from young to old, are found at the local monasteries spinning everything from very large prayer wheels (with the right hand only and in a clockwise direction) to personal ones as they walk, again clockwise, around the building.

LANDSCAPES

Travel Photography Tips Landscapes Sunset Over Rice Paddies  Punakha Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Capturing the landscapes in Bhutan is a must. Here, venturing just outside the town of Punakha, on a fairly rough dirt road, we came upon yet another series of rice terraces spilling down the hillside. At this time of year (image above), during the summer monsoon season, the fields are an almost neon green, and just as the sun was falling behind the nearby mountains, considered foothills to the mighty Himalaya nearby, we pulled off the side of the road and I was able to make a few images before the good light was gone. Summertime is a great season to highlight the very green rice fields and other local vegetation. Come fall and winter, however, this area is completely dry and brown and a different photo opportunity presents itself (below).

Travel Photography Tips Landscapes Dried Up Rice Paddy Landscape in November  Punakha Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

MAN-MADE WONDERS

Travel Photography Tips - Man Made Wonders - Tigers Nest Monastery in Complete Fog  Paro Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Travel Photography Tips - Man Made Wonders - Tiger s Nest Monastery in the Mist  Paro Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

The Tiger’s Nest monastery is a classic example of a man-made wonder. First constructed in the late 1600s (it’s since burned down and been rebuilt several times) at almost 3,000 feet above the valley floor on a sheer cliff face, this architectural wonder is a great way of demonstrating man’s ingenuity and building skills. These images were made from the local viewpoint, just across a gaping chasm with a 1,000-foot drop. In the summer, weather is a bit unpredictable, but that can make for some great photo opportunities. I’d prefer to shoot on the fringes of inclement weather any day, as opposed to a plain blue sky, it just makes for much more interesting images. In the first image above I wanted to show what the scene looked like upon arrival, the prayer flags disappearing into the fog. But a bit of patience, one of the photographer’s best qualities (along with curiosity), paid off as the low lying clouds came and went, eventually revealing the Tiger’s Nest in an otherworldly haze, adding to its mystery.

NATIVE CLOTHING

Travel Photography Tips - Native Clothing - Woman in Kira in Wheat Field  P  Bumthang Valley Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

The people of Bhutan wear very distinctive clothing. The women wear what’s known as a “kira,” often accented by two broaches, as in the first image above. Some of these broaches are antiques and have been handed down to each successive generation and can be worth thousands of dollars. Again, something very distinctive to this place. I encountered this particular woman as she was picking wheat in a field in the Bumthang Valley. Asking my guide/driver to pull over to the side of the road, I climbed over several fences and negotiated some muddy trails to get closer, but I like to think the result was worth the effort. She’s also wearing a traditional bamboo hat often seen in this part of the country, and I certainly want to highlight that.

Travel Photography Tips- Native Clothing - Man in a Gho with Shadow  Thimpu Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Men, on the other hand, wear what’s called a “gho.” This single piece of cloth, expertly wrapped around the man’s body and accented by the often white, rolled up sleeves, is seen everywhere in Bhutan, from the young school boys to the older men spinning their prayer wheels. The addition of a simple shawl is required to be draped over the man’s shoulder and around his waist as he enters the very sacred dzongs where it’s of the utmost importance to show respect for country and king. Our guide, Sangay, said that it’s law that during working hours a man must wear a gho. One of my tour participants asked him what the penalty is if a man is caught not wearing a gho, and Sangay said, “There is no penalty, it just doesn’t happen.”

PEOPLE

Travel Photography Tips - People - Little Girl with Hands Folded at Pepper House  Bumthang Valley Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Travel Photography Tips - People -  Time in a Face  Thimpu Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

As in any country, a people are their culture, and undoubtedly Bhutan is no exception. The people photo opportunities are virtually endless in this nation where everyone seems to be outside most of the time (the interiors of the houses can be very dark and smoky from the wood burning stoves and lack of quality electricity). Although I do make an effort to get inside of people’s homes to experience this essential part of a place, as well. Getting out early in Bhutan will often be rewarded, allowing you to capture the children on their way to school, and the adults on their way to work, all generations dressed in their traditional ghos and kiras.

STORYTELLING

Travel Photography Tips - Storytelling  Sangay Walking Up Trail to Tiger s Nest Monastery  Paro Bhutan  Copyright 2013 Ralph Velasco

Although it’s a good aspiration, not every image has to be worthy of a magazine cover. Sometimes it’s important just to make an image so that you can convey the story behind it. In this shot I simply wanted to show the condition of the trail we took to get up to the viewpoint overlooking the infamous Tiger’s Nest Monastery near Paro, Bhutan. It’s not going to win any awards, but I think it conveys this idea, which was my intention.

Final words of advice

So my recommendation is to work from your physical shot list, not try to commit it to memory or shoot whatever presents itself at the time. The more prepared you are for the photo opportunities you seek, the more you’ll find them, I can almost guarantee it. Have a goal of five solid images in each category before you tick it off your list, as this will provide you with options when it comes to putting together that book, website or slideshow presentation later.

Finally, know that any single image may represent two, three or even five or more categories, so there can be some crossover.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

How to Capture the Essence of a Place – Travel Photography Tips

The post How to Capture the Essence of a Place – Travel Photography Tips by Ralph Velasco appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Place Vendome in Venice Gets Giant Bird Nest Tree Huts

24 Oct

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Place Vendome Bird Nest Installations 1

Upon the centuries-old architecture of Place Vendome in Paris, nest-like structures of head-scratching proportions have appeared; messy wooden lean-to huts clinging to verdigris pillars and posh old buildings. It seems as if giant birds have descended upon the city and made it their home.

Place Vendome Bird Nest Installation 3

The parasitic structures are the ‘tree huts’ of Japanese artist Tadashi Kawamata, a continuation of a series that has taken him around the globe.

Place Vendome Bird Nest Installation 4

Five small cabins have been installed in key places in the Place Vendome, including the Vendome column, built in 1702 as a monument to the armies of Louis XIV.

Place Vendome Nest Installation 2

The confusion of wooden slats draws the curiosity of onlookers, wondering who – or what – could be inside. The structures will be up for a month as part of FIAC 2013, an art festival in Paris. Among the other places in which Tadashi’s parasitic architecture has been installed are New York’s Madison Square Garden, Florence and Switzerland.

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Google Unveils Cutting Edge Photography Tools to Make Your Photos Look Better and the World A More Beautiful Looking Place

16 May

Through Glass

Google unveiled significant new innovation in the world of online photography this morning, continuing their rapid development pace on Google+. All in, Google+ pushed out 41 new features today.

Much of the new work is focused on post production photography to make people’s photographs look better than they can straight out of the camera.

Some have suggested that part of Instagram’s success has been their ability to enhance users’ photos with very simple, one touch filters. Instagram has focused on a faux film aesthetic which actually highlights the flaws in many photos to give them more of an artistic, old school feel. By contrast, Google’s easily and automatically applied post production tools, released today, work to make photos look more vivid, life like and realistic.

By using simple techniques like skin softening, clarity adjustment, smart vignetting, HDR and other enhancements, Google, by default, now offers an enhanced photo for every photo uploaded by users to Google+. Also, with this new tech, Google will give you the ability to view the before and after results and decide which you prefer to use. For photographers who do not want their photos altered in any way, these users can turn this default functionality off.

Google Releases New Tools for Photographers Using Google+

As a photographer, I have long been a believer of photo manipulation and post processing technology. Ansel Adams said “you don’t take a photograph, you make it,” as highlighted in Google Social Chief Vic Gundotra’s keynote this morning. Much of Ansel Adams’ genius has been attributed to the work that he did in the darkroom with his photos, his zone system, his post production technology of his time.

I post process all of my photos. The photo at the top of this post is the very first photo that I made with my new Google Glass that I bought yesterday. While I was able to get the composition to a point where I wanted in camera, much of the pop of that image is done with my own post production technique and style.

Many of my photographer friends also spend a great deal of time post processing their images — but the vast majority of the people out there really don’t post process at all. These people don’t own Lightroom and Photoshop or Nik Suite or Aperture or whatever else they might use to improve their photos. These are every day non-photographers who are still enamored with photography and imagery.

By applying some very basic algorithmic based enhancements, Google can make photos for the masses look much better than straight out of the camera. This is a very smart move on Google’s part. Where Instagram makes your bad photos look purposefully worse, Google now makes your bad photos look purposefully better! I stole that line from an unnamed source, btw. ;)

Where this new tech is especially powerful is in photos of people. By using basic skin softening post production tech, photos of people will look better on Google+ than on other social networks. By appealing to our vanity, this gives Google a big advantage. If people can post photos of themselves on Google+ that make them look BETTER than on other networks, many more people will choose to post their photos on G+. Just watch as people post photos of themselves on G+ for auto beautification and even download and post them to other networks I bet.

All of this sort of fancy post production *can* be done today by skilled post production photographers who spend hours and hours behind Photoshop. Now much of it will be automated and released to the masses.

There will undoubtedly be some naysayers about this tech. The same folks who moaned about the Instagramification of mobile photography will probably also complain about this new tech too. Google was smart here by giving users a very simple way to deal with this, by simply turning off this feature.

While the photo enhancements were the sizzle of Google’s announcements today, there were many other significant enhancements added to Google Photos.

Google will now begin to analyze your images and auto tag them. This is no trick where low paid overseas workers are manually reviewing your images; Googles’ algorithms now can look at the context of your photo and the actual subjects in your photos to identify possible tags for the images. If you post a photo of the Eiffel Tower, Google can detect the Eiffel Tower in your photo and add that tag for you. If Google gets the tag wrong, for whatever reason, it’s simple for you to just remove it.

What this means is that more of your photos will be seen in search by people using Google products. Many photographers are looking for more traffic and views on their photos. Who better to provide this traffic than Google Search, yes, using Google auto applied tags. This is the future of image search. If you are a photographer, especially one who depends on photography for your living, you cannot afford to ignore the significance of Google Search. Many of my own photo sales are made by people finding my photos while searching on Google. By uploading your photos to Google+, your photos will rank better in search and now even moreso with this new auto-keywording functionality.

Google Releases New Tools for Photographers Using Google+

Google also introduced a new smart algorithm that can analyze your photos and show you which ones Google thinks are the best of the batch, offering you highlights. Oftentimes we will “spray and pray,” taking 20 images of one person or subject. Google will analyze all of the images and suggest the best one for you. Google uses not just technical information about a photo (is it blurry or underexposed?) but they are using human tested aesthetics to look for what is most appealing.

But there’s more! In addition to the tech released above, Google has also added some very easy tools which will auto generate gifs for you of your photos, auto HDR bracketed shots, and suggest other compelling ways for you to present your photography to the world. Almost miraculously, Google can even look at photos of multiple people and merge the photos into a single photo that takes the best expression of each individual from *different* photos.

All of this also comes with an awesome new look and layout of Google+ which better highlights photography on the network. Popular photos will now be featured in jumbo new oversized form across a three column layout. For non highlighted photos, Google also made portrait oriented photos, especially, look better and bigger. In the past, the portrait format was the worst looking photo format on Google+, now it’s the best — that’s worth noting. ;) For folks who don’t like the three column layout, they can switch back to a single column if they’d like.

A couple of other notes: all of this work that Google does with your photos is done behind the scenes for your eyes only. You can use the tech or not use the tech. If you use the tech and like it, *you* then choose to share the image to Google+. Nothing is shared until you choose to share it.

The new technology will only work with the JPG format (hopefully Google comes out with RAW support down the road). Google increased everyone’s storage to 15GB of online storage, but note that any photo sized 2048 px or smaller does not count towards your 15GB storage limit (you can also buy more storage if you want to). Google allows unlimited uploading of photos that you either manually resize or allow Google to resize to 2048 px. There is an option on Google where you can set whether or not you want to upload full high res photos or resized 2048 sized images.

I upload some of my photos full res, and many of them I resize manually myself to 2048 px.

Google also introduced a free, stand alone hangout app that you can now use with your mobile phone or desktop device bridging text, photos and real time group video into a single app that preserves conversations (at your choice) over long periods of time. Hangouts have been one of the most popular Google+ feature and several photography related shows have been built around them.

More detail on these changes at Google here. More from Matthew Hanley here. Trey Ratcliff wrote insightful commentary here.


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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